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Journal Article

Characterisation of the Tyre Spray Ejected Downstream of a Bluff Automotive Body

2022-03-29
2022-01-0893
Considerations of surface contamination and airborne spray are becoming increasingly significant throughout the automotive design process. Advanced driver assistance systems, such as autonomous cruise control, are growing in popularity. These systems rely on external sensors, the performance of which may be impaired by both direct obstruction and spray. Existing experimental methods of assessing front-end surface contamination and wiper performance have typically utilised fixed spray-grids positioned upstream of the vehicle. The resulting spray is largely steady in nature, in contrast to the unsteady flow-field and tyre spray that would be produced by preceding vehicles. This paper presents the numerical analysis of the spray ejected downstream of a simplified automotive body. The continuous phase (air) is solved using a DDES-based approach coupled with a Lagrangian representation of the dispersed phase (water).
Technical Paper

Towards In-Cylinder Flow Informed Engine Control Strategies Using Linear Stochastic Estimation

2019-04-02
2019-01-0717
Many modern I.C. engines rely on some form of active control of injection, timing and/or ignition timing to help combat tailpipe out emissions, increase the fuel economy and improve engine drivability. However, development of these strategies is often optimised to suit the average cycle at each condition; an assumption that can lead to sub-optimal performance, especially an increase in particulate (PN) emissions as I.C. engine operation, and in-particular its charge motion is subject to cycle-to-cycle variation (CCV). Literature shows that the locations of otherwise repeatable large-scale flow structures may vary by as much 25% of the bore dimension; this could have an impact on fuel break-up and distribution and therefore subsequent combustion performance and emissions.
Journal Article

Vortex Drag Revisited

2023-04-11
2023-01-0017
Some car shapes produce a substantial drag component from the generation of trailing vortices. This vortex (or lift dependent) drag is difficult to quantify for the whole vehicle, for reasons that are discussed. It has previously been shown that vortex drag may be assessed for some car features by consideration of the relationship between changes in drag and lift. In this paper this relationship is explored for some different vehicle shape characteristics, which produce positive and negative lift changes, and their combinations. Vortex drag factors are determined and vortex drag coefficients considered. An interference effect is identified between some of these features. For the simple bodies investigated the vortex drag contribution can be considerable.
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